While the cathedral contains some fourteenth century glass, it lacks sufficient quantity or quality to repay one coming from a distance to see it.
We will postpone consideration of Rouen until we take up the sixteenth century because its thirteenth century glass is unimportant.
Foy at Conches, which we will visit later for its sixteenth century glass.
I must in conclusion just say one word about a source of information for the sixteenth and seventeenth century glass of the Low Countries which is for the most part wanting in the case of other countries.
Much even of the sixteenth-century glass is merely fantastic, and appeals only to childish tastes.
Of a later time than these South German examples of enamelled ware are the even more definite copies of the sixteenth-century glass of Venice that were made in the neighbourhood of Cologne.
The windows of this chapel contain some of the best thirteenth-century glass in existence.
The other windows have some fine old fourteenth-century glass; the north-east window is modern.
In the clearstory windows at the curve of Sens' choir is more XIII-century glass, but it is later work, lacking the marvelous glow of the choir-aisle lancets.
In all France there exist barely a dozen good specimens of twelfth- century glass.
Corroyer's volume contains wood-cuts of a few fragments of thirteenth-century glass discovered in his various excavations; but one may take for granted that with so much light, colour was the object intended.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "century glass" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.